The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) has released new combat footage from Nushki and published additional profiles of fidayeen it says carried out attacks under the ongoing second phase of “Operation Herof,” including a married couple involved in an assault on a Pakistani forces’ camp in Pasni.
Through its official media channel, Hakkal, the BLA said that Yasma Baloch, also known as Zareena, and Waseem Baloch, also known as Zirbar, had carried out what it described as a coordinated fidayeen attack on a Pakistani military camp in Pasni.

The group said Yasma Baloch was born on 14 February 1997 in Alandoor, Buleda, and joined the Majeed Brigade in 2022.
Waseem Baloch, born on 27 April 1992 in Kallahdar, Zamuran, became involved in the armed movement in 2014 and formally joined the Majeed Brigade in 2022.
The BLA said the couple “shared a marriage before they shared a final stand,” describing their deaths in the Pasni attack as “a moment in which private life and national duty fully converged, turning a partnership into a symbol of shared commitment and resistance.”
The BLA also released the profile of another fidayeen fighter, Sabzal Baloch, son of Sol Jan Baloch, code name Kohsar. He was born in 1999 and was from Kor-e-Posht, Buleda.

According to the group, Sabzal joined the Baloch Liberation Army in 2022 and became part of the Majeed Brigade in 2023. The BLA said he carried out a fidayee attack in Pasni on 31 January 2026.
His trajectory, the group said, reflected “sustained intent rather than momentary impulse,” adding that his decisions “were taken with awareness of consequence and responsibility, shaped by lived experience rather than circumstance.”
The BLA had earlier released details of other fidayeen involved in operations in Gwadar, Nushki and Pasni, including Asifa Mengal (female, 23), Hatam Naz Sumalani (female, 60), Fazal Baloch (male), and Hawa Baloch (female).
Referencing these names collectively, the group said: “Age and gender cease to be decisive here. What becomes decisive are the conditions that confront a person every day, testing their dignity, identity and freedom.
Occupation is not confined to land alone; it seeps into everyday choices, and some choices leave silent yet lasting marks on history.”
The BLA said these individuals did not represent a single event but the “outcome of a long and continuous experience in which memory, loss and responsibility become tightly intertwined,” describing their decisions as “deliberate steps in which an individual places the future above the self.”
BLA Releases Combat Footage from Nushki
The BLA also released new combat footage from Nushki, showing fighters targeting what it described as a major Pakistani military camp using heavy weapons, including SPG-82 recoilless rifles, light machine guns, and RPGs.
According to the group, members of the Majeed Brigade entered several military positions after carrying out suicide attacks at entry points, while additional fighters launched strikes inside what the BLA said was the central headquarters of Pakistan’s intelligence agency, the ISI, in Nushki.
Reports of intense clashes in Nushki have continued into a third day, with local sources telling The Balochistan Post that supply routes for Pakistani forces have been cut and that ground reinforcements are facing resistance.
Local sources also reported continued aerial bombardment and said at least eleven civilians, including one child, have been killed so far in strikes carried out over the past 72 hours.
The BLA said its operations in Nushki and several other districts under “Operation Herof” Phase Two were still ongoing and that additional footage and details would be released later.




























